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Retrieving derivative information from tunneling current errors in scanning tunneling microscopy

ORAL

Abstract

Noise and errors in signal are a common hindrance in experiments. When the source of noise or error is understood, new experimental strategies can be employed to either reduce the error or measure the error as a new source of signal. In constant-current mode scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), despite the active feedback loop, one such error as observed experimentally is a current offset from its setpoint that occurs when the tunneling junction is subject to external pertubations. We show through low-temperature STM imaging and spectroscopy, as well as phenomenological modeling, that this current offset contains local tunneling barrier height information from a d2I/dz2 dependence and local density of states information from a (dI/dV)2 dependence when the tip-sample distance and sample bias voltage are periodically perturbed, respectively. This new source of signal enables a faster and simpler method for measuring these quantities than traditional lock-in amplifier methods. We further demonstrate evidence of the generalizability of our method in other negative feedback systems.

Publication: Submitted to Physical Review Letters: McKenzie, J., Sharma, N., Toole, M., Ortiz, B.R., Capa Salinas, A., Wilson, S.D., Liu, X. Deriving Material Properties from Error Signals in Scanning Tunneling Microscopy

Presenters

  • James McKenzi

    University of Notre Dame, University of Notre Dame, Stavropoulos Center for Complex Quantum Matter

Authors

  • James McKenzi

    University of Notre Dame, University of Notre Dame, Stavropoulos Center for Complex Quantum Matter

  • Nileema Sharma

    University of Notre Dame, University of Notre Dame, Stavropoulos Center for Complex Quantum Matter

  • Matthew Toole

    University of Notre Dame

  • Brenden R Ortiz

    Oak Ridge National Laboratory

  • Andrea C Salinas

    University of California, Santa Barbara, University of California Santa Barbara, University of Maryland College Park

  • Stephen D Wilson

    University of California, Santa Barbara

  • Xiaolong Liu

    University of Notre Dame, University of Notre Dame, Stavropoulos Center for Complex Quantum Matter, Cornell University